The World’s First Psychologist
You’ve probably never even heard of Wilhelm Wundt.
If we look back into history, psychology as such is not yet that old. It wasn’t until 1879 that Wilhelm Wundt (1832–1920) opened the first official psychology laboratory in Leipzig, Germany.
As a modern science, it’s not even one and a half-century old. In earlier eras, however, psychology-related topics were raised mostly by philosophers. Thus, psychology can be traced back as far as thousands of years, for instance to the world of the Ancient Greeks — with Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle — and in the Far East to the times of Confucius and Buddha.
If we take a closer look at Western philosophy in more recent centuries, we find the basics of psychology as we know it today.
Matter over mind
In seventeenth-century France, René Descartes (1596–1650) proclaimed the now-famous sentence, “Cogito ergo sum”, “I think, therefore I am”. Until Descartes, the understanding of who and what we are was mainly subject to religious views. The Cartesian dualistic view maintained that we humans consist of a material body and an immaterial soul. Most of our inner workings were attributed to the soul. Descartes, however, submitted that most of what we do, such as eating, drinking, sleeping, walking, et cetera, could…